The word "oscillate" in everyday speech means to go back and forth, either physically or mentally. An example of a sentence using the word "oscillate" is "My new job is great, but I have to oscillate between New York and Los Angeles at least once a week. "
Oscillate?
It does oscillate. We have to use the word 'vibration' if the amplitude of oscillation is very very low. The prong of a fork vibrates. But simply pendulum oscillates.
Yes. The oscilations are in the electric and in the magnetic fields.
parallel
There IS gravity in a vacuum - there's no AIR.
The swing will oscillate after Helen moves it.
I hope you are not expecting any technical related sentence containing the word oscillate since you have posted the question under Science Category. However, a sentence for the word oscillate can be "the pendulum of a clock oscillates across it's mean position after every 1 second."
NO. They do not oscillate.
Yes, oscillate is a verb.
The metronome pendulum's oscillations were hypnotic. The graph showed that the pendulum underwent one oscillation per second. The jury's opinion seemed to oscillate daily. The candle flame oscillated when it was introduced to certain sounds during the experiment.
The part of speech for oscillate is verb.
No, the output of monostable multivibrator does not oscillate. As it has only one stable output we do not get oscillations. We get a square wave as output.
Oscillation is a noun and doesn't have any tenses. Oscillate is a verb. Oscillated is the past tense and past participle of oscillate.
bounce, duck, hop, oscillate
Oscillate?
No need to oscillate. It always behaves like whichever one your experiment is set up to detect.
i do not know how to use embalming in a sentence. (there is the sentence)